Managing cpu resources for high availability micro-partitions

ABSTRACT

Profile properties in a partition profile are user-configurable through a management entity such as a management console. A partition manager calculates a secondary processing unit entitlement for a logical partition based in part on a secondary processing unit mode property in the partition profile. The secondary processing unit entitlement may be smaller than a primary processing unit entitlement for the logical partition. The partition manager reserves processing units from a secondary shared processor pool equal to the logical partition&#39;s secondary entitlement for the logical partition. The primary and secondary processing unit entitlements may be stored in primary and secondary configuration data structures associated with the logical partition. The partition manager may relocate the logical partition to the secondary shared processor pool in response to a predetermined condition.

BACKGROUND

This disclosure relates generally to virtualization in computingsystems, and more particularly to synchronization, replication, andmigration of micro-partitions. A micro-partition in a high availabilitysolution may regularly save its processing state and its memory state toan alternate host machine to provide failover support in the event of aprimary host machine failure, and may require the availability ofprocessing resources associated with the alternate host machine inaddition to resources associated with the primary host machine.

SUMMARY

Disclosed herein are embodiments of a system for managing a logicalpartition. The logical partition is associated with a partition profile.The partition profile includes a secondary processing unit modeproperty. A management entity, such as a management console, displaysthe partition profile and receives configuration input from a user. Apartition manager calculates a secondary processing unit entitlement forthe logical partition that is smaller than a primary processing unitentitlement for the logical partition. The calculation is based at leastin part on the user-configurable secondary processing unit modeproperty. The partition manager reserves processing units equal to thesecondary entitlement from a secondary shared processor pool for thelogical partition. The partition manager may relocate the logicalpartition to the secondary shared processor pool in response to apredetermined condition, such as a hardware failure.

Also disclosed herein are embodiments of a method for managing a logicalpartition. The logical partition's partition profile is inspected, and asecondary processing unit entitlement is calculated based at least inpart on a secondary processing unit property in the partition profile.The secondary entitlement is less than a primary entitlement for thelogical partition. Processing units equal to the secondary entitlementare reserved from a secondary shared processor pool for the logicalpartition. The primary and secondary processing unit entitlements may bestored in primary and secondary configuration data structures associatedwith the logical partition.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a portion of an example high availabilityvirtual machine.

FIG. 2A is a block diagram of a portion of an example configuration forhigh availability micro-partitions.

FIG. 2B is a block diagram of a portion of an example configuration forhigh availability micro-partitions with reduced resource requirements.

FIG. 3 illustrates a portion of the properties, assignments,entitlements, and allocations for an example high availabilitymicro-partition with reduced resource requirements.

FIG. 4 is a high-level flow diagram for an example method for reducingCPU resource requirements for a high availability micro-partition.

FIG. 5A is Part 1 of a more detailed flow diagram for an example methodfor reducing CPU resource requirements for a high availabilitymicro-partition.

FIG. 5B is Part 2 of a more detailed flow diagram for an example methodfor reducing CPU resource requirements for a high availabilitymicro-partition.

In the figures and description, like numbers generally refer to likecomponents, parts, steps, and processes.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

A computing system typically consists of computing hardware, such asprocessors and memory, and operating system software. In more advancedcomputing systems, the physical hardware can be logically partitioned tocreate multiple virtual machines, where each logical partition isvirtualized as a separate computing system with a separate operatingsystem. System firmware provides a low-level interface between eachlogical partition and the various hardware components while isolatingthe logical partition operating systems from the hardware details.

Micro-partitioning is a form of logical partitioning that provides forthe fractional allocation of resources from a pool of shared processorsto a logical partition. The processing capacity of a micro-partition isdescribed using processing units. One processing unit represents theprocessing capacity of a single processor core. Processing unitsrepresent the time that a partition is dispatched on physicalprocessors, and processing units are used to define the capacityentitlement of a partition. For example, a partition with a 1.0processing unit entitlement is allocated the processing power of oneentire processor core. That processing capacity may be provided by 0.5of two processor cores, by 0.25 of four processor cores, by 0.5 of oneprocessor core and 0.25 of two processor cores, or by some otherconfiguration of the shared processor pool. For another example, apartition with a 0.9 processing unit entitlement may be allocated 0.9 ofone processor core, may be allocated 0.45 of two processor cores, may beallocated 0.8 of one processor core and 0.1 of another processor core,or may be allocated processing capacity from the shared processor poolin some other configuration.

An operating system executing on a logical partition using dedicatedprocessors can calculate the number of operations that it can performconcurrently by counting the whole number of dedicated processorsallocated to the logical partition. Conversely, an operating systemexecuting on a logical partition using shared processors cannotcalculate a whole number of operations from a fractional processing unitentitlement; however, virtual processors can provide a needed layer ofabstraction. A virtual processor is a representation of a physicalprocessor to the operating system of a logical partition that usesshared processors. The system firmware distributes the processing unitsthat are allocated to a logical partition among the virtual processorsassigned to that logical partition. For example, if a logical partitionis allocated 1.80 processing units and is assigned two virtualprocessors, then each virtual processor will have a portion of the 1.80total processing units to support its workload. For example, each of thetwo assigned virtual processors may have 0.9 processing units supportingits workload.

Logical partitions use virtual processors to access fractions ofphysical processors. From the system firmware point of view, virtualprocessors represent dispatching objects. The system firmware dispatchesvirtual processors to physical processors according to the logicalpartition's processing unit entitlement. At the end of the systemfirmware's dispatch cycle, each logical partition has received totalprocessing time equal to that logical partition's processing unitentitlement.

Logical partitions can be capped or uncapped. A capped partition islimited to its processing unit entitlement. But if spare processingpower is available in the shared processor pool or if other partitionsare not fully using their entitlements, an uncapped partition may beallocated processing units in excess of its entitlement to satisfy itsapplication processing demand.

There can be limits to the number of processing units assigned to avirtual processor. For example, in some logical partition configurationsa virtual processor may be assigned no less than 0.10 processing units.Stated another way, those logical partition configurations may belimited to ten virtual processors for each allocated processing unit.Other logical partition configurations may be limited to fewer than tenvirtual processors for each allocated processing unit. Still otherlogical partition configurations may be allowed more than ten virtualprocessors for each allocated processing unit. In any case, however, themaximum number of processing units assigned to a virtual processor isalways 1.0. A virtual processor with a processing unit assignment of 1.0is the equivalent of a physical processor from the point of view of thesystem firmware. Consequently, the number of virtual processors assignedto a logical partition provides an upper limit to the partition'spotential processing power. A logical partition is unable to utilizeprocessing units in excess of its assigned number of virtual processors,even if the logical partition is uncapped.

A logical partition can generally manage its workload most effectivelyif its virtual processor assignment is close in value to its processingunit allocation. However, because increasing the number of virtualprocessors increases the number of operations that can run concurrently,performance may improve under some conditions if the number of virtualprocessors is increased. But increasing the number of virtual processorsassigned without increasing the number of processing units allocated maydecrease the speed at which each operation can execute. In addition,splitting the available processing power among many virtual processorsmay impede the operating system's ability to efficiently shiftprocessing power between processes.

The physical processors in a shared processor pool are typically part ofa larger hardware system, which may be referred to as a centralelectronics complex. In addition to shared processors, a centralelectronics complex may include dedicated processors, memory, abackplane, and other computer system hardware. To provide failoversupport in the event of a hardware failure in a logical partition'sprimary shared processor pool, the logical partition may need to bereplicated or partially replicated on an alternate, or secondary, sharedprocessor pool. The secondary shared processor pool may be part of thesame central electronics complex as the primary shared processor pool,it may part of a completely separate central electronics complex, or mayexist as some combination of the two.

One approach to providing such failover support is to provide a highavailability solution. In a high availability solution, a logicalpartition can be relocated to an alternate environment with little or noloss of performance in response to a hardware failure. High availabilitymay be accomplished by mirroring or otherwise tracking the state of thelogical partition in an alternate location, for example bycheckpointing, although other methods of providing high availability arecontemplated. A portion 100 of an example checkpoint-based highavailability virtual machine is illustrated in FIG. 1. Partition manager110, which may be part of the system firmware, may periodically save thestate of primary logical partition 130 and/or report the state to asecondary location 122. In some embodiments, the updated memory state ofprimary logical partition 130 may be continuously sent to secondarylocation 122, and state information may be sent whenever primary logicalpartition 130 is halted. A periodic report 150, may occur, for example,every 25 milliseconds. In some embodiments, a periodic report 150 mayinclude halting execution of primary logical partition 130, sendingstate information (for example, across a network) to partition manager112 on secondary host 122, waiting for partition manager 112 toacknowledge receipt of the updated information, and then resumingexecution of primary logical partition 130 on primary host 120. In someembodiments, partition manager 110 and partition manager 112 may beseparate functions of the same partition manager, while in someembodiments, the partition managers may be separate entities.Furthermore, logical partition 130 may be one of many logical partitionson primary host 120, and each logical partition on primary host 120 maybe checkpointed to a location on an alternate host, which may besecondary host 122 or another alternate host not shown in example 100.

The high availability solution example 100 described above may introduceperformance overhead resulting from the periodic reporting. The solutionis also potentially resource-intensive, because secondary logicalpartition 132 must have the same amount of memory and processing poweravailable as primary logical partition 130, even though these resourcesare not completely consumed unless failover actually occurs. Embodimentsdescribed herein may reduce the resource requirements for highavailability solution 100 when secondary logical partition 132 canperform, at least temporarily, with less processing power than primarylogical partition 130. Whether or not logical partition 132 can performwith less processing power, and therefore use fewer processingresources, than logical partition 130 may depend on profile properties,workload, or some combination of profile properties, workload, and otherfactors. An example configuration is illustrated in FIGS. 2A and 2B.

In the example configuration 200 for a high availability solution shownin FIG. 2A, logical partition 212 and logical partition 214 areexecuting on primary central electronics complex 210. Logical partition222 and logical partition 224 are executing on primary centralelectronics complex 220. In this example, shared processor pools oncentral electronics complex 210 and central electronics complex 220 caneach provide up to 7.0 processing units. Logical partition 212 has beenallocated 4.0 processing units, logical partition 214 has been allocated3.0 processing units, logical partition 222 has been allocated 4.0processing units, and logical partition 224 has been allocated 3.0processing units. The processing unit allocations for logical partitions212, 214, 222, and 224 may have been determined when the logicalpartitions were first activated, for example through logical partitionprofile properties. Properties of logical partitions may beuser-controllable and may include, for example, the minimum number ofprocessing units, the desired number of processing units, the maximumnumber of processing units, and which shared processor pool to use. Thelogical partition profile properties may also include the minimum numberof virtual processors, the desired number of virtual processors, themaximum number of virtual processors, and whether the partition iscapped or uncapped. Various embodiments may include all, part, or noneof the above profile properties, and may include properties notspecified here. Furthermore, logical partition assignments andallocations may be dynamically adjusted after activation, for example totake advantage of unconsumed system resources or to support higherpriority workloads. Dynamic adjustment may be user-controllable (forexample through a management console), may be under control of systemfirmware alone or in combination with a user, or may be controlled insome other manner.

In order to ensure protection against hardware failures in primarycentral electronics complexes 210 and 220, substantially instantaneousfailover of logical partitions 212, 214, 222, and 224 may be provided. Away to provide such protection is by implementing a high availabilitysolution as previously described, in which logical partitions 212, 214,222, and 224 are continually replicated on an alternate system,illustrated in this example as secondary central electronics complex230. But because secondary central electronics complex 230 has aprocessing capacity of only 7.0 processing units, central electronicscomplex 230 alone is insufficient to provide failover protection for allfour logical partitions 212, 214, 222, and 224 with their combinedprocessing unit entitlement of 14.0 processing units.

Should logical partition 212 experience a failover event, logicalpartition 212 can be relocated to central electronics complex 230 andretain its processing unit entitlement of 4.0 processing units. Aftersuch a failover event, the operating system and applications previouslyexecuting on logical partition 212 would be executing on logicalpartition 232A. Such nearly instantaneous failover may be completelytransparent to the applications, and largely transparent to theoperating system, although the operating system may need to adjust tothe new environment after failover.

Should logical partition 214 experience a failover event following thefailover of logical partition 212, logical partition 214 can berelocated to central electronics complex 230 and likewise retain itsprocessing unit entitlement of 3.0 processing units. After such asubsequent failover event, the operating system and applicationspreviously executing on logical partition 214 would be executing onlogical partition 234A. Because the migration to logical partitions 232Aand 234A have completely exhausted the processing resources on secondarycentral electronics complex 230, secondary central electronics complex230 is unable to support any subsequent failover of logical partitions222 or 224. Should logical partitions 222 or 224 require relocation to asecondary host, they must consume additional resources on a differentcentral electronics complex, not shown.

In FIG. 2B, the logical partition configuration example 200 from FIG. 2Ais modified to show an example 202 that requires fewer processorresources. Logical partitions 212, 214, 222, and 224 are executing asdescribed above in FIG. 2A. In example 202, however, when logicalpartition 212 is relocated to secondary central electronics complex 230,logical partition 232B is allocated a smaller number of processing unitsthan primary logical partition 212, specifically 1.5 processing unitscompared to 4.0 for partition 232A. The size of this reduced secondaryprocessing unit entitlement may be based in whole or in part on primarylogical partition 212's profile properties, on partition 212's currentassignments and/or allocations, on partition 212's current or expectedworkload, on some combination of the foregoing, or may be based on otherfactors. Ideally, the size of logical partition 232B's processing unitentitlement may be reduced as much as is practical without undulycompromising the performance of logical partition 232B's workload, ormay be reduced to the minimum entitlement that enables logical partition232B to continue to meet its service requirements. Many factors mayinfluence the size of the reduction, including but not limited towhether and how quickly repairs can be made to the failing hardware oncentral electronics complex 210, whether workload can be temporarilyshifted away from logical partition 232B, the criticality of logicalpartition 232B's workload, and the availability of system resources.

Subsequent failovers of primary logical partitions 214, 222, and 224 tosecondary logical partitions 234B, 236B, and 238B, respectively, alsorequire fewer processor resources, allowing all four partitions tofailover to secondary central electronics complex 230. This eliminatesthe need for additional resources not shown, as was required in exampleconfiguration 200. In example configuration 202, each logical partition234B, 236B, and 238B has a secondary entitlement of 1.5 processing unitsfor a total of only 6.0 processing units. Central electronics complex230, with its 7.0 processing units, can therefore provide failoversupport for a worst-case scenario of all four logical partitions 212,214, 222, and 224 failing simultaneously or in succession.

The processor resources reserved on secondary central electronicscomplex 230 for logical partitions 232B, 234B, 236B, and 238B are notconsumed until a failover actually occurs. Although these resources arereserved and available should any of the primary logical partitions 212,214, 222, and 224 experience a failover event, these processor resourcesneed not be idle. In example 202, logical partitions 212, 214, 222, and224 are running on their primary processing unit entitlements in theirrespective primary central electronics complexes 210 and 220. Processorresources on secondary central electronics complex 230 represented bylogical partitions 232B, 234B, 236B, and 238B are reserved and availablefor failover processing should the need occur. If any logical partitionfails over to central electronics complex 230, although it may beguaranteed availability of a quantity of processing units equal to itssecondary processing unit entitlement, under some conditions therelocated logical partition may consume additional unused resources fromcentral electronics complex 230.

Because the quantity of processing units allocated to an uncappedpartition can expand dynamically beyond the partition's entitlement inorder to take advantage of unused cycles in a shared processor pool, anyuncapped logical partition failing over to secondary host 230 mayutilize the full amount of available processing units on host 230, eventhough the amount may exceed the relocated partition's processing unitentitlement. The logical partition may, however, be limited to less thanthe full amount of available processing units by its configuration, suchas by its virtual processor assignment. For example, logical partition224 running on 3.0 processing units of primary host 220 has a secondaryprocessing unit entitlement of 1.5 processing units; therefore 1.5processing units are reserved and available on secondary host 230 incase of a failure on primary host 220. Should failover occur, if all ofthe other logical partitions 212, 214, and 222 are running on theirprimary hosts, then when logical partition 224 is relocated to host 230,logical partition 224 may be allocated more than its 1.5 secondaryprocessing unit entitlement. Since host 230 has a total of 7.0processing units available, logical partition 224 may even be allocatedmore processing capacity on failover than it had on its primary host220.

Should logical partition 212 then fail over, the shared processorresources on central electronics complex 230 may be redistributedbetween the two relocated logical partitions 232B and 238B. Thisredistribution may be proportional to each relocated logical partition'sprimary processing unit entitlement or the redistribution may be basedon a different model. As other logical partitions fail over, the sharedprocessor resources are further redistributed among all relocatedlogical partitions. Various methods of determining how secondary hostresources are distributed may be used, including for example inproportion to the logical partitions' uncapped weight values, but underno circumstances may a relocated logical partition ever receive lessthan its secondary processing unit entitlement.

A computer system may be user-configurable, for example though amanagement console, to implement a high availability solution and totake advantage of reduced resource requirements such as those describedin example 202. For example, a logical partition may have a profileproperty designating an option to provide checkpoint-based protectionfor the logical partition. A management console or its equivalent mayalso provide a method for a user to designate a secondary host for thelogical partition, and may have a list of hosts from which to make aselection. Protected logical partitions may have a profile propertydesignating an option to determine a minimum value for the partition'salternate (secondary) processing unit entitlement. A user may selectthis option if the logical partition is a micro-partition and if thelogical partition can tolerate a smaller processing unit entitlementthan its primary processing unit entitlement. In some embodiments, thisoption may alert the partition manager to assign a secondary processingunit entitlement to the logical partition that is the greater of eitherthe minimum number of processing units specified for the partition(specified, for example, in the partition's profile), or the minimumprocessing unit entitlement possible given the partition's virtualprocessor assignment. A user's selecting an “original” option ratherthan this “minimum” option for a protected partition's secondaryprocessing unit entitlement may provide for a logical configuration asshown in example 200, where a partition's secondary processing unitentitlement is the same as its primary processing unit entitlement. Thisfeature may also be used to restore a relocated logical partition'soriginal entitlement on a subsequent failover, which may actually be a“failing back” to a restored host.

Example 300 in FIG. 3 shows a portion of the properties, assignments,entitlements, and allocations for an example logical partition with asecondary processing unit entitlement less than its primary processingunit entitlement. Properties defining the logical partition may beuser-configurable, such as through a management console, in logicalpartition profile 310. In some embodiments, a management console may bea dedicated workstation that provides a graphical user interface forconfiguring, operating, and performing basic system tasks, while in someembodiments, the management console may be any entity, such as a system,service, or module, or part of a system, service, or module appropriatefor providing information to a user and for receiving information from auser. Five of the possible logical partition profile properties areshown: a minimum virtual processors (VPs) property 311, a desired VPsproperty 312, a secondary processing unit (PU) mode property 313, aminimum PUs property 314, and a desired PUs property 315.

To understand how the secondary PU mode property 313 may affect thecalculation of the secondary processing unit entitlement, it may beuseful to first look at how the logical partition's primaryconfiguration 320 is determined when the logical partition is firstactivated. The logical partition's current VPs 322 is calculated basedon the available resources in the system. The current VPs 322 will notbe less than the minimum VPs 311 and will not be more than the desiredVPs 312. The logical partition's current PUs 325 is also calculatedbased on the available resources in the system. The current PUs 325 willnot be less than the minimum PUs 314 and will not be more than thedesired PUs 315. But the current PUs 325 is also limited by a minimumper-virtual-processor processing units limitation. This limitationspecifies the number of virtual processors that can be supported by asingle processing unit, and in some embodiments may be a fixed systemparameter. In this example, the minimum per-virtual-processor processingunits limitation is assumed to be 0.10, or ten virtual processors persingle processing unit. So the current PUs 325 will not be less than0.10 times the current VPs 322, even if the minimum PUs 314 is a smallernumber. The original PUs 326 is then copied from the current PUs 325.

The logical partition's profile 310 may be stored in a managementconsole save area in flash memory. The logical partition's primaryconfiguration 320 may also be stored in flash memory, and also in thepartition manager's data structures. Note that in some embodiments, thedesired VPs 312 and the desired PUs 315 may not be stored in thepartition manager's data structures.

For maximum user flexibility, in some embodiments the current PUs 325may be modified while the logical partition is running. This feature mayassist in taking advantage of unconsumed system resources, may providefor the redistribution of system resources, and may also assist inrestoring a logical partition to its original entitlement withoutdisrupting its workload in the event that its secondary host becomes itspermanent home. The original PUs 326 may be synchronized to the currentPUs 325 any time a user dynamically modifies the current PUs 325.

The logical partition's secondary configuration 330 may also be storedin flash memory and in the partition manager's data structures. Lookingnow at how the logical partition's secondary configuration 330 isdetermined when the logical partition is first activated, the currentVPs 332 is copied from the primary configuration's current VPs 322. Butfor the current PUs 335, the secondary PU mode 213 set to “min”indicates that this logical partition is able to function with lessprocessing power than the primary entitlement should relocation berequired. If a logical partition must maintain its normal processingpower during a failover, if the logical partition has previously beenrelocated with reduced processing power, or if other circumstancesdictate doing so, then the user would set the secondary processing unitmode property 213 to “original” and the partition manager would ensurethat the logical partition's secondary (or tertiary in the case of arestoration) processing unit entitlement is at least as great as itsprimary processing unit entitlement.

Because the secondary PU mode 213 is set to “min”, the current PUs 335will be either the minimum PUs 314, or 0.10 times the current VPs 322,whichever is larger. In this example the minimum PUs 314 has a value of0.1 and the current VPs 322 has a value of 4; consequently, the currentPUs 335 for secondary configuration 330 is set to 0.10×4=0.4. Althoughthe minimum PUs 314 has a value of 0.1, the current VPs 322 value of 4restricts the secondary processing unit entitlement to no less than 0.1per virtual processor.

The original PUs 336 is copied from the original PUs 326 in the primaryconfiguration 320. This field stores the primary processing unitentitlement as calculated for current PUs 325 when the logical partitionwas first activated. If a logical partition is relocated to an alternatelocation, perhaps with a reduced processing unit entitlement, it may bedesirable to make the alternate host the permanent home for the logicalpartition. This may be accomplished by setting the current PUs 335 valueto the original PUs value 336 and making the new host the logicalpartition's primary host. Allowing a user to dynamically reconfigure therelocated logical partition provides maximum user flexibility. A logicalpartition may be activated on a first host, may fail over to a secondhost, may operate on the second host with a reduced entitlement, may becheckpointed to a third host while operating on the second host, and mayhave its entitlement restored to its primary entitlement while remainingon the second host, all with little or no disruption of the logicalpartition's operation.

Following a failover, when the logical partition is running in itssecondary location, a user may set the secondary PU mode property to“original”. A new alternate is then reserved on a tertiary host with thelogical partition's primary processing unit entitlement. This allows therelocated logical partition to “fail over” to the tertiary host, thusrestoring the logical partition to its primary processing capacity.

Flow diagram 400 in FIG. 4 is a high-level flow diagram illustrating anexample embodiment of a method for reducing CPU resource requirementsfor a high availability micro-partition. At step 410, the partitionmanager determines a primary processing unit entitlement for the logicalmicro-partition (LPAR) based at least in part on primary host systemresources and user input. At step 415, the partition manager allocatesprocessing units from the primary shared processor pool equal to theLPAR's primary entitlement and activates the LPAR at step 420. Thepartition manager then determines at step 425 a secondary processingunit entitlement for the LPAR that is smaller than the LPAR's primaryentitlement. The size of the secondary entitlement may be based at leastin part on user input and the LPAR's primary configuration, for exampleon the number of virtual processors assigned to the LPAR. A smallersecondary processing unit entitlement equates to fewer consumed CPUresources on the secondary host should failover occur. At step 430, thepartition manager reserves processing units from the secondary sharedprocessor pool equal to the LPAR's secondary entitlement. Note thatsecondary resources are not consumed by the LPAR unless the LPAR isactually relocated to the secondary host, and secondary resourcesreserved for the LPAR may be allocated to and consumed by other logicalpartitions even while reserved for the LPAR.

To protect against hardware and firmware failures on the primary hostand to provide for rapid failover, the LPAR is continually synchronizedwith the secondary host. In example 400, the partition manager uses acheckpointing technique to accomplish this synchronization. At step 435,if it is time to report, then at step 440 the partition manager maytemporarily stop the LPAR, send updated information on the memory stateand CPU state of the LPAR to the secondary host, wait foracknowledgement of receipt of the state information, and then resume theLPAR. After the report is complete, or if it is not time to report, thenat step 445 if a primary host failure occurs, then the partition managerresumes the LPAR on the secondary host at step 455 with a quantity ofprocessing units from the secondary shared processor pool equal to theLPAR's secondary entitlement.

Although example method 400 describes a loop in which a partitionmanager continually checks whether a failure has occurred on a primaryhost at step 445 and checks whether it is time to send state informationto a secondary host at step 435, this loop is for illustration purposesonly and may not reflect the actual methods used. Embodiments may usepolling, hardware interrupts, software interrupts, or other techniquesfor determining when these or other events have occurred or need to beperformed. In some embodiments, a special partition on the primary hostknown as the checkpoint service partition may provide heartbeat servicesto the partition manager, and may be monitored to determine when afailure has occurred on the primary host. Embodiments for reducingresource requirements for high availability micro-partitions may notperform each step shown in example 400, may perform some or all of thesteps in a different order, or may perform additional steps not shown.Furthermore, embodiments may combine several steps or expand individualsteps into multiple steps.

Flow diagram 500 in FIGS. 5A and 5B is a more detailed flow diagramillustrating an example embodiment of a method for reducing CPU resourcerequirements for a high availability micro-partition. At step 504, thepartition manager determines a primary processing unit entitlement forthe logical micro-partition (LPAR). At step 506, the partition managerallocates processing units from the primary shared processor pool equalto the LPAR's primary entitlement and activates the LPAR at step 508.

At step 510, if failover protection is not enabled for this LPAR, thenthe process ends at step 512 and the LPAR continues to run on theprimary host without failover protection or with another method offailover protection. But if failover protection is enabled at step 510,then the primary processing unit entitlement is saved in the LPAR'sprimary configuration as the original entitlement at step 514. Thepartition manager checks for whether the secondary processing unit modeis set to “minimum” at step 516. In some embodiments, this mode isuser-controllable with a secondary processing unit mode property. If theLPAR is configured for minimum mode at step 516, then the partitionmanager determines at step 518 a secondary processing unit entitlementfor the LPAR that is smaller than the LPAR's primary entitlement, andmay be based at least in part on user input and the LPAR's primaryconfiguration. But if the LPAR is not configured for minimum mode atstep 516, then the partition manager determines at step 520 a secondaryprocessing unit entitlement for the LPAR that is equal to the LPAR'ssaved original entitlement. Although not shown in example 500, afterdetermining that failover protection is enabled at step 512,checkpointing or some other method of ensuring high availability of theLPAR begins.

At step 522, the partition manager reserves processing units from thesecondary shared processor pool equal to the LPAR's secondary processingunit entitlement: either a minimum quantity or the original quantity asdetermined in step 516. At step 524, if the primary processing unitconfiguration has been dynamically modified, then the saved originalentitlement configuration parameter is updated to reflect themodification at step 526.

If a primary host failure occurs at step 528, then the partition managerresumes the LPAR on the secondary host at step 532 with a quantity ofprocessing units from the secondary shared processor pool equal to theLPAR's secondary entitlement. At steps 534 and 536, if the LPAR isuncapped and if resources are available in the secondary sharedprocessor pool, then additional CPU resources in excess of the LPAR'ssecondary processing unit entitlement may be allocated to the LPAR atstep 538. At step 540, if multiple LPARs have failed over to thesecondary host, then the partition manager may redistribute CPUresources among the secondary host LPARs. The partition manager on thesecondary host may be the same partition manager as on the primary host,or may be a different partition manager in communication with theprimary partition manager.

Returning to step 534, if the LPAR is not uncapped, or if it is uncappedand after the allocation and/or redistribution of secondary hostresources, then step 544 is performed. If failover protection is notenabled for the LPAR in step 544, then the LPAR continues to run on thesecondary host without failover protection. If the LPAR is uncapped,then redistribution of secondary CPU resources may continue to beperformed periodically. Whether failover protection is enabled for theLPAR when it is running on a secondary host may be a fixed systemparameter or may be user-controllable, and may be controlled by the sameparameter that controls whether failover protection is enabled in step510.

If failover protection is enabled at step 544, then a process similar tosteps 516-522 is performed. At step 546, the partition manager checksfor whether the secondary processing unit mode is set to “minimum” or“original.” A secondary processing unit mode of “original” may indicatethat the LPAR has been configured to “fail back” to a restored host, andat step 548, the partition manager determines a secondary processingunit entitlement for the LPAR that is equal to the LPAR's saved originalentitlement. The partition manager then reserves processing units from atertiary shared processor pool (which could be, for example, therestored primary shared processor pool or a replacement primary sharedprocessor pool) equal to the LPAR's tertiary processing unit entitlementat step 550. At this point, the LPAR is running on the secondary hostand performing checkpoints or otherwise preparing for a failover to thetertiary host. The LPAR may be running with a reduced CPU entitlement,and even if the LPAR has been allocated unconsumed resources that arereserved for another LPAR, the LPAR may be required to drop back down toits minimum entitlement should another LPAR failover.

To complete the restoration, the partition manager relocates the LPAR tothe tertiary host at step 554 with the reserved processing units. Atthis point the LPAR is running on its new (or restored) primary host andthe partition manager returns to step 510 to determine whether and howto provide secondary host protection for the LPAR. In some embodiments,the original secondary host may remain as the secondary host for therestored LPAR, and no further steps are necessary to enable failoverprotection. In that case, the partition manager may return to step 524rather than step 510 (path not shown).

Returning to step 546, a secondary processing unit mode of “minimum” mayindicate that the LPAR may remain permanently on the secondary host, andat step 556, the partition manager determines a minimum secondaryprocessing unit entitlement for the LPAR. The partition manager thenreserves processing units from a tertiary shared processor pool (whichwill serve as the future secondary host) equal to the LPAR's tertiaryprocessing unit entitlement at step 558. At this point, the LPAR isrunning on the secondary host and performing checkpoints or otherwisepreparing for a failover to the tertiary host. The LPAR may be runningwith a reduced CPU entitlement, and even if the LPAR has been allocatedunconsumed resources that are reserved for another LPAR, the LPAR may berequired to drop back down to its minimum entitlement should anotherLPAR failover.

Rather than fail back to a restored host, at step 560 the LPAR'ssecondary processing unit entitlement is modified to match its originalprocessing unit entitlement and the secondary host is now the LPAR'sprimary host. The tertiary host is now the secondary host. Checkpointingcontinues, the LPAR is protected, and the partition manager returns tostep 524 to wait for either a dynamic entitlement modification or aprimary host failure.

Although example method 500 uses looping constructs where the partitionmanager continually checks whether a failure has occurred, whether adynamic modification has occurred, or whether resources requireredistribution, these looping constructs are for illustration purposesonly and may not reflect the actual methods used. Embodiments may usepolling, hardware interrupts, software interrupts, or other techniquesfor determining when these or other events have occurred or need to beperformed. Also, embodiments for reducing resource requirements for highavailability micro-partitions may not perform each step shown in example500, may perform some or all of the steps in a different order, or mayperform additional steps not shown. Furthermore, embodiments may combineseveral steps or expand individual steps into multiple steps.

The major components of a computer system as described herein mayinclude one or more processors, a main memory, a terminal interface, astorage interface, an I/O (Input/Output) device interface, and a networkinterface, all of which are communicatively coupled, directly orindirectly, for inter-component communication via a memory bus, an I/Obus, and an I/O bus interface unit. The computer system may contain oneor more general-purpose programmable central processing units (CPUs). Inan embodiment, the computer system may contain multiple processorstypical of a relatively large system; however, in another embodiment thecomputer system may alternatively be a single CPU system. Each processormay execute instructions stored in the main memory and may comprise oneor more levels of on-board cache. Main memory may comprise arandom-access semiconductor memory, storage device, or storage medium(either volatile or non-volatile) for storing or encoding data andprograms. Main memory may alternatively represent the entire virtualmemory of the computer system, and may also include the virtual memoryof other computer systems coupled to the computer system or connectedvia a network. Main memory may be conceptually a single monolithicentity, but in some embodiments, main memory is more complex, such as ahierarchy of caches and other memory devices. Main memory may exist inmultiple levels of caches, and these caches may be further divided byfunction, so that one cache holds instructions while another holdsnon-instruction data, which is used by the processor or processors.Memory may be further distributed and associated with different CPUs orsets of CPUs, as is known in any of various so-called non-uniform memoryaccess (NUMA) computer architectures.

Embodiments described herein may be in the form of a system, a method,or a computer program product. Accordingly, aspects of embodiments ofthe invention may take the form of an entirely hardware embodiment, anentirely program embodiment (including firmware, resident programs,micro-code, etc., which are stored in a storage device) or an embodimentcombining program and hardware aspects that may all generally bereferred to herein as a “circuit,” “module,” or “system.” Further,embodiments of the invention may take the form of a computer programproduct embodied in one or more computer-readable medium(s) havingcomputer-readable program code embodied thereon.

Any combination of one or more computer-readable medium(s) may beutilized. The computer-readable medium may be a computer-readable signalmedium or a computer-readable storage medium. A computer-readablestorage medium, may be, for example, but not limited to, an electronic,magnetic, optical, electromagnetic, infrared, or semiconductor system,apparatus, or device, or any suitable combination of the foregoing. Morespecific examples (an non-exhaustive list) of the computer-readablestorage media may comprise: an electrical connection having one or morewires, a portable computer diskette, a hard disk, a random access memory(RAM), a read-only memory (ROM), an erasable programmable read-onlymemory (EPROM) or Flash memory, an optical fiber, a portable compactdisc read-only memory (CD-ROM), an optical storage device, a magneticstorage device, or any suitable combination of the foregoing. In thecontext of this document, a computer-readable storage medium may be anytangible medium that can contain, or store, a program for use by or inconnection with an instruction execution system, apparatus, or device.

A computer-readable signal medium may comprise a propagated data signalwith computer-readable program code embodied thereon, for example, inbaseband or as part of a carrier wave. Such a propagated signal may takeany of a variety of forms, including, but not limited to,electro-magnetic, optical, or any suitable combination thereof. Acomputer-readable signal medium may be any computer-readable medium thatis not a computer-readable storage medium and that communicates,propagates, or transports a program for use by, or in connection with,an instruction execution system, apparatus, or device. Program codeembodied on a computer-readable medium may be transmitted using anyappropriate medium, including but not limited to, wireless, wire line,optical fiber cable, Radio Frequency, or any suitable combination of theforegoing.

Embodiments of the invention may also be delivered as part of a serviceengagement with a client corporation, nonprofit organization, governmententity, or internal organizational structure. Aspects of theseembodiments may comprise configuring a computer system to perform, anddeploying computing services (e.g., computer-readable code, hardware,and web services) that implement, some or all of the methods describedherein. Aspects of these embodiments may also comprise analyzing theclient company, creating recommendations responsive to the analysis,generating computer-readable code to implement portions of therecommendations, integrating the computer-readable code into existingprocesses, computer systems, and computing infrastructure, metering useof the methods and systems described herein, allocating expenses tousers, and billing users for their use of these methods and systems. Inaddition, various programs described hereinafter may be identified basedupon the application for which they are implemented in a specificembodiment of the invention. But, any particular program nomenclaturethat follows is used merely for convenience, and thus embodiments of theinvention are not limited to use solely in any specific applicationidentified and/or implied by such nomenclature. The exemplaryenvironments illustrated in FIG. 1 are not intended to limit the presentinvention. Indeed, other alternative hardware and/or programenvironments may be used without departing from the scope of embodimentsof the invention.

While the invention has been described with reference to the specificaspects thereof, those skilled in the art will be able to make variousmodifications to the described aspects of the invention withoutdeparting from the true spirit and scope of the invention. The terms anddescriptions used herein are set forth by way of illustration only andare not meant as limitations. Those skilled in the art will recognizethat these and other variations are possible within the spirit and scopeof the invention as defined in the following claims and theirequivalents.

1-11. (canceled)
 12. A method for managing a logical partition, themethod comprising: inspecting a partition profile associated with thelogical partition, the partition profile configurable by a user througha management entity; calculating a secondary processing unit entitlementfor the logical partition based at least in part on a secondaryprocessing unit property in the partition profile, the secondaryprocessing unit entitlement less than a primary processing unitentitlement associated with the logical partition; and reserving aquantity of processing units from a secondary shared processor pool forthe logical partition, the quantity of processing units equal to thesecondary processing unit entitlement.
 13. The method of claim 12,further comprising: storing the primary processing unit entitlement as acurrent number of processing units value in a primary configuration datastructure, the primary configuration data structure associated with thelogical partition and further associated with a primary shared processorpool.
 14. The method of claim 13, further comprising: storing thesecondary processing unit entitlement as a current number of processingunits value in a secondary configuration data structure, the secondaryconfiguration data structure associated with the logical partition andfurther associated with the secondary shared processor pool.
 15. Themethod of claim 13, further comprising: modifying the primary processingunit entitlement in response to configuration input from the userthrough the management entity; and storing the modified primaryprocessing unit entitlement as the current number of processing unitsvalue in the primary configuration data structure.
 16. The method ofclaim 12, further comprising: relocating the logical partition to thesecondary shared processor pool in response to a predeterminedcondition; calculating a tertiary processing unit entitlement for thelogical partition based at least in part on the secondary processingunit mode property; and reserving a quantity of processing units from atertiary shared processor pool for the logical partition, the quantityof processing units equal to the tertiary processing unit entitlement.17. The method of claim 16, further comprising: storing the primaryprocessing unit entitlement as an original number of processing unitsvalue in a secondary configuration data structure, the secondaryconfiguration data structure associated with the logical partition andfurther associated with the secondary shared processor pool, wherein thetertiary processing unit entitlement is equal to the original number ofprocessing units value.
 18. The method of claim 17, further comprising:relocating the logical partition to the tertiary shared processor poolin response to a second predetermined condition.
 19. The method of claim16, wherein the tertiary processing unit entitlement is equal to thesecondary processing unit entitlement.
 20. The method of claim 19,further comprising: promoting the secondary shared processor pool to theprimary shared processor pool; and promoting the tertiary sharedprocessor pool to the secondary shared processor pool.
 21. The method ofclaim 12, wherein the management entity is a dedicated workstation.